Research Centers

ECE is a leader or primary participant in 22 interdisciplinary research
centers, ranging from solar power to high-speed telecommunications. These
entities offer many opportunities for corporate partnerships and for
enhancing educational experiences for undergraduate and graduate students.

Please note that each center is responsible for the maintenance of its
own site.

CCS Center for Compound Semiconductors is a focal point for research
and educational collaborations in the Georgia Tech community related
to compound semiconductors, including conventional and nanotechnology
materials and devices.Russell
D. Dupuis, Director

CeGPCenter for Energy & Geo Processing creates innovative research practices and entrepreneurship-based education in the area of digital processing of geo signals and energy data. The center is a partnership between the School of ECE at Georgia Tech and the Department of Electrical Engineering at King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (KFUPM) in Saudi Arabia. Ghassan AlRegib and Ali Ahmad Al-Shaikhi, Directors

GTACGeorgia
Tech Analog Consortium is a membership organization involved
in research in the design, fabrication, testing, and application of analog
integrated circuits and systems and CAD development and applications.Farrokh Ayazi, Director

IPICIntelligent
Power Infrastructure Consortium is a university-industry-utility
consortium that forms a focal point for the academic teaching and research
program in advanced power technologies at Georgia Tech. IPIC provides
a mechanism to foster and accelerate the development and adoption of early-stage,
pre-competitive, high-risk, and high-impact technologies in power applications.Deepak
Divan, Director

PRC3D Systems
Packaging Research Center is the largest university-based
research and education center focusing on next generation, system-level
packaging of electronics. The Center is sponsored by the National Science
Foundation.Rao
R. Tummala, Director

RIM@Georgia TechCenter
for Robotics and Intelligent Machines draws on faculty expertise in interactive and
intelligent computing, control, and engineering from the College of Engineering,
College of Computing, and the Georgia Tech
Research Institute. Emphasizing personal and everyday robotics as well
as the future of automation, RIM@Georgia Tech helps students understand
and define the
future role of robotics in society.Magnus
Egerstedt, Associate Director for Research